🔴TOP 10 Beekeeping MYTHS!!!

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Kamon Reynolds - Tennessee's Bees

Kamon Reynolds - Tennessee's Bees

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 226
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Don't forget to check out our organized playlists that have over 200 videos addressing issues from installing packages and nuc - to feeding pollen patties in SHB country.
@pmac5621
@pmac5621 4 жыл бұрын
I'm 6 years in and suffered a lot of losses listening to crazy advice. Yours and Ian's information is sound and probably why my bees are doing so well this year. Keep spreading the word!
@gileshoney5796
@gileshoney5796 4 жыл бұрын
True story. I am assuming you are talking about Ian Steppler. He is the big reason why I switched to a single brood box management style, and I haven't been happier for doing so.
@pmac5621
@pmac5621 4 жыл бұрын
@@gileshoney5796 Yes. Less voodoo and more common sense = healthier bees. :)
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks P mac!
@kennethtitus3879
@kennethtitus3879 Жыл бұрын
You got to like a guy that tells it like it is! We do appreciate you Kamon.
@worksinglass
@worksinglass 4 жыл бұрын
Nice to hear that I can get into the hive more often than once every 7 to 10 days as a new bee keeper the first few times I didn’t get everything done and wanted to go back and check things a couple of days later but didn’t because it was too soon. I will be checking more often this year providing my bees make it through this cold Canadian winter.
@edcoffin3514
@edcoffin3514 4 жыл бұрын
They will 😎😎😎
@Lccastaldo
@Lccastaldo 4 жыл бұрын
But...but...but.... my bees KNOW me! I know, I know! We love THEM - they don't love US! Great list. I am no expert, but there are also those that would like to keep it mysterious and complicated. You take the mythology out of keeping our bees, and I appreciate your methods!
@GivenChancesFarm
@GivenChancesFarm 4 жыл бұрын
We started with bees last May, and have heard many of these myths. We get into our hives frequently to see how they are changing so that we can learn. We feel if we are not in there to see what is going on and comparing them to each other then we can’t correct issues that arise.
@437AlBig
@437AlBig 4 жыл бұрын
Myth #7. I use cedar chips in all of my quilt boxes for the winter and I also store my honey super frames buried in cedar chips, Works great and keeps out the wax moths and other bugs. I just air them out before using them again.
@ginomorris4873
@ginomorris4873 4 жыл бұрын
This was truly fantastic kamon thank you so much ..I say it again I new the first time I watched one of your KZbin posts I was paying attention to the right person..It would be great if you put a book out with all the experience you have I sure would purchase one thanks so much for all you do for us bee keepers that want solid and sound information and advice...
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Gino!
@christianlawton3548
@christianlawton3548 4 жыл бұрын
Hi I live in Western Australia and would like to say a big thank you for all your great information that for the most part has worked very well for me so good on you mate and keep on doing your videos thanks Christian.
@georgesmith4509
@georgesmith4509 3 жыл бұрын
I liked the idea of a second entrance above the excluder makes lot of sense. Here Aus the eucalyptus flows are usually heavy and fast, but short lived. which is why we have to move hives more than other countries. So you don't want your foragers wasting inside the brood box. I'll try it on a couple of boxes
@NYGRLINTN
@NYGRLINTN 4 жыл бұрын
I really needed to hear #6 and #9 today. I'm brand new to this and am constantly questioning EVERYTHING I do. Thank you!
@tonywestsbees6042
@tonywestsbees6042 4 жыл бұрын
I couldn't agree more on all 10 points! You mentioned Tom Seeley's books. He also has some great presentations at the National Honey Show (along with other greats) which were video taped.
@huggybare9
@huggybare9 4 жыл бұрын
You really are the best bloke on KZbin.
@badassbees3680
@badassbees3680 4 жыл бұрын
Man I miss this video somehow but dang I sure do agree with every single word of it ,every single word..there's a whole lot of repetition hearsay on KZbin , and it's a shame cuz the people that have worked hives countless hours just becomes annoyed to hear it when they know better,that's why I like the Kamon decided to teach.. because I know what he's saying is right! Good job Kamon you tube needed you for real
@pnkemp
@pnkemp 4 жыл бұрын
The cedar one is really weird. In the UK cedar is the preferred wood to make hives out of. It is light, rot resistant, and lasts for decades.
@gileshoney5796
@gileshoney5796 4 жыл бұрын
Great video. If I can add one myth to your list. 11- Honey bees need a double brood-box, especially in colder climates. This is just completely not true. After switching to a single brood box management last year I have to say that I could not be happier. That being said, the management style is very different, but the bees do great, especially in the winter months.
@larryblackwell1916
@larryblackwell1916 4 жыл бұрын
Last August I fed pollen through a Burns feeding board, with the patty on top of the board over a wire mesh screen, so the bees could get to the pollen but they could not get out to on top of the board. Apparently the SHB were laying eggs in the pollen on top of the feeder board that was inaccessible to the bees. I found and killed dozens of very small larvae. In future I will lay the patty directly on top of the frames so the bees can take care of the problem. Thanks for you input.
@pjayadeep
@pjayadeep 2 жыл бұрын
👍 I'm into the third year of beekeeping and I've figured out many of these myths by logical thinking. Especially the ones on waxmoths and yellow jacket.
@mshaw290808mi
@mshaw290808mi 4 жыл бұрын
You did not cover the biggest myth of all, "It is easy to make money raising bees!"
@buttsbeesllc4063
@buttsbeesllc4063 4 жыл бұрын
I think that might bee true! 🤣🤣
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Haha true words
@MegaDavyk
@MegaDavyk 4 жыл бұрын
I depends where you are, I spent a couple of seasons in Western Australis along the west coast and you could not help but raise bees there and the local bee club memberships were exploding just like the bee colonies and people were desperate for bees even though they were everywhere. I stopped trying to raise bees to sell and made a very good living just picking up bee swarms throwing them in box's with syrup for a week to draw out the frames and selling them on. The hives I had were constantly being split to stop them swarming. The coastal regions of WA really are Bee and Bee Keepers Paradise. Beekeepers there expect to get 200 kg of honey a year and good migratory beekeepers can get as much as 300 kg of honey a year and feeding bees is not something many beekeeepers there expect to do.. So it does depend on where you are.
@play-doughsrepublic5121
@play-doughsrepublic5121 3 жыл бұрын
@@MegaDavyk - you also don't have Varroa mites, which devastate bees colonies universally, no matter where you are. We've become less beekeepers and more mite managers. Consider yourself very lucky.
@MegaDavyk
@MegaDavyk 3 жыл бұрын
@@play-doughsrepublic5121 I am currently living in New Zealand which has had Varroa for 20 years, I know a we bit about them too.
@beehinde
@beehinde 4 жыл бұрын
Regarding wax moth, from the PLoS ONE Journal, the bees bite has an anesthetic effect and they can make wax moth sleep temporarily to remove them. The compound is also being studied so that someday it can be used in hospitals.
@Makermook
@Makermook 4 жыл бұрын
I watch Ian for the gee-whiz aspect of seeing 7 deep supers on a single deep brood box, but you are my bee guru for how to approach my own little (one colony so far) apiary.
@massachusettsprepper
@massachusettsprepper 4 жыл бұрын
I agree with everything you said here. For a long time I thought the Queen ruled the roost until I learned otherwise many years ago. And a queen excluder is your best friend, I hate having to sort through frames to pick out the honey. And if breaking the seal on your hives in winter kill them, all of mine would be dead. Here in the Northeast you have to get into your bees to make sure they have plenty of feed or come the end of March you do have a bunch of dead hives. of course you don't go breaking medial on a day when it's 5° outside. But on any day that we have a break and whether where it jumps up around 48° that's a good day to assess your hives. And you're right there are so many myths out there. Excellent video and as always thanks for sharing.
@johnmyers3889
@johnmyers3889 4 жыл бұрын
Even in my bee club I have been told queen excluder is a honey excluder but I tried it on a few of mine and didnt notice a differnce. I will be using a queen excluder on all my honey colony it's just so much faster and can pull boxs without worry if the queen is there. It's really crazy all the myths spouted as the gospel by even good beekeepers with alot of hives. Nice video 100 percent agree
@gileshoney5796
@gileshoney5796 4 жыл бұрын
I actually think that all things equal, the queen excluder for sure doesn't hinder the honey production,. If nothing else it forces the bees to push the honey up in order to make more room for brood down below. I use a single brood box management style and noticed last year that there really wasn't a lot of honey being stored in that bottom box while at the same time the brood seemed to cover upwards to 8+- frames.
@BESHYSBEES
@BESHYSBEES 4 жыл бұрын
The difference isn’t in the honey production it’s in the bees, you wear the wings off the young nectar depositors with the excluders and they cant forage but it’s only a small amount of bees this happens too because they’re dedicated to that job for a certain period o time, because they can’t fly they get relegated to other in-house duties instead
@FloryJohann
@FloryJohann 4 жыл бұрын
@@BESHYSBEES I think this is another myth!
@showmebees9431
@showmebees9431 4 жыл бұрын
Another excellent video! I recommended your channel to our Beginning Beekeepers Workshop yesterday. Keep up the good work!
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Show me Bees!
@stevenkeegan6260
@stevenkeegan6260 4 жыл бұрын
“They don’t know when to stop”. Made me chuckle 😀. Another very interesting video.
@lippardr
@lippardr 4 жыл бұрын
Kamon, Please do an experiment this year using queen excluders. Two good hive of comfortable size. One with and one without a queen excluder. This test will settle this assumption or belief once and for all. With great respect, I lean toward greater honey weight from experience. Most reasons for the excluder is to keep the queen in the lower brood chamber and not in the honey supers. Beekeeping is most exciting isn't it. Thanks my friend.
@buttsbeesllc4063
@buttsbeesllc4063 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the idea
@mikeries8549
@mikeries8549 4 жыл бұрын
I'd add comparing the plastic vs wire QEs. The wire ones are better for my bees.
@brucesbees
@brucesbees 3 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed this video Kamon. Thanks!
@MissDaizeymae
@MissDaizeymae 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for all your videos. I learn something Everytime I listen and watch!!!!!
@chrisjohnson4666
@chrisjohnson4666 4 жыл бұрын
I agree opening the hive in winter wont do harm in an emergency... I did learn I want bees more than honey to that end many years ago I went to 3 deep hive bodies and never looked back... In Northern Ohio and the snowbelt weve had snow as late as 3rd week in May and as early as first week of October and a couple years had 20 plus days in a row with daytime temps below 25 nights temps single digits and teens...
@mikeries8549
@mikeries8549 4 жыл бұрын
It's too much work inspecting 30 deep frames. If it works for you great.
@michaelraulerson1149
@michaelraulerson1149 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all your videos it has extremely helped me as a new bee keeper.
@ddsindpls
@ddsindpls 4 жыл бұрын
Not a beekeeper, just researching so far. Myth #3 concerning opening a hive in the winter. From just a common sense standpoint I wouldn't think this is a myth. Maybe it doesn't kill your bees outright, but isn't it still harmful to the brood? They try to keep the brood around 95F and if you're opening the hive when it's 55F out, that is a big temperature differential. You open the hive top and all of that heat is going to escape up and out the top. Wont't this chilling affect hurt the brood?
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
It certainly causes a loss of energy. However, we are not talking about long inspections or opening at 0 degrees Fahrenheit. I don't pull frames of brood unless it is 40 degrees or higher and I am very quick. Keep in mind that bees don't warm the whole hive just the cluster. Most colonies up north have little to no brood right now. Unless there is a need opening a hive is Ill advised. Many are of the opinion you can't open a hive until it is around 60 degrees and this is wrong. We actually requeened a colony in late December this year. It was in the 40s
@ddsindpls
@ddsindpls 4 жыл бұрын
@@kamonreynolds Thank you!
@dennismyers3020
@dennismyers3020 4 жыл бұрын
WOW Thank you Kamon
@mrsweettater
@mrsweettater 4 жыл бұрын
I have noticed that for some reason, a lot of bee keepers put a great deal of faith in antidotal evidence. They see something once or twice and believe that's the way it always is. I was a scientist before retiring and I'm too skeptical to fall for that! It's not hard to set up a quick little experiment with controls and repeat it until the weight of evidence reveals a pattern. A catfish gets big when he is picky about hitting the bait!
@normabroussard9560
@normabroussard9560 4 жыл бұрын
I learn something from you every video
@paulchristu996
@paulchristu996 4 жыл бұрын
What about “the color of your bee jacket HAS to match your underwear”? Personally, I’ve popped into hives on occasion in my Rocky Raccoons a few times and the girls did not seem offended.
@jorgeclaverie6752
@jorgeclaverie6752 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting presentation. Thank you!!!
@beasbeesrva2615
@beasbeesrva2615 4 жыл бұрын
Myth #12. Anyone can be treatment free. All you need are the right "magic bees" Ankle Biter, Mite Mauler, Saskatraz, whatever. I just want bees that produce honey.
@FloryJohann
@FloryJohann 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, 1st year, 100% treatment free. Made me lose 100% of the bees. 2nd year, all season 100% treatment free, treated right before winter because the bees did not do so good. Made me lose 100% of the bees. 3rd year listen to Kamon and done what he done and treated like he done. Made me get 80% of my bees go through winter and gave me a bee explosion the following year(2020). Even got plenty of honey from those bees. Sometimes , bees just need some help for maybe another million years before they can handle situations that where caused by humans. If we have animals , we need to take care of them and it does not matter if it is a cow or a pig or bees.
@MegaDavyk
@MegaDavyk 4 жыл бұрын
Myth 10, there are variables. I had someone call me to remove bees from under a container. He had disturbed them 2 days before with a weed wacker slinging debris under the container they came out and stung him. I go up to the container get down on my knees stick my face right in the pathway of the bees coming and going. The bees all of a sudden streamed out past my face and went straight to the guy who had disturbed them 2 days before and stung him up, completely ignoring everybody else who was standing around. They recognised this guy presumably by smell.
@danielweston9188
@danielweston9188 4 жыл бұрын
I use a beeswax caulk (in a caulking gun).Summer and winter. Boxes separate easily and are water/air tight.
@researcherAmateur
@researcherAmateur 4 жыл бұрын
I agree with everything. Whot about sany/shedy spot... Misspeling everything. We gota excluders with frames and an enthering. Center. No bercome. Just wood
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
I like a little shade myself but not all day shade!
@researcherAmateur
@researcherAmateur 4 жыл бұрын
Yes, is time too thray it your way. 40 years on the san is inaf Thanks... just now we lost golden medal in handball and bronz in water polo.😥😥😥✊🇭🇷.
@billybobjones4317
@billybobjones4317 3 жыл бұрын
When I got my first hive i was told to make sure I faced it North East, and it was very important for some reason I have forgotten now as it was a long time ago :) I still do it as it does put the Sun onto the hive entrance first up in the Morning and the bees seem to like it ? The myth about checking your hive to often can kill them is crap, I found the opposite is more likely to cause problems :) I had a Hive Beetle out break from not checking often enough, it was when I was a very new hive owner and I didn't want to open the hive and bother the Bees to much :) Now I use the Hive Dr bases on all my Hives as I found it the easiest and so far best way to keep SHB's out of my hive. Those Beetles reproduce damned fast and make a lot of mess as well, lucky that hive survived, but it went from a thriving hive to virtually no Bees in the Super and probably half the Bees in the brood.
@babybeeapiaries8667
@babybeeapiaries8667 4 жыл бұрын
keep on keeping on, love that expression, use it here too!
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Will do!
@jweaver7170
@jweaver7170 4 жыл бұрын
Again Great bee information.
@ginomorris4873
@ginomorris4873 4 жыл бұрын
Another amazing and educating video goes right back when I mentioned that I will only be using your information kamon thank you much..
@matthewtownsend3166
@matthewtownsend3166 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the videos and information. I thought it was 6-8 weeks after brood that most bees live? Point still stands though and I agree.
@craigslattery1901
@craigslattery1901 3 жыл бұрын
They're like Slivers, be afraid. I have many hives, two are at my front door and see many people many times a day. These two hives don't sting.
@gregmccammon2330
@gregmccammon2330 3 жыл бұрын
Depends where you live! We absolutely lose healthy hives here in Western Canada to Yellow Jackets. We have nests of Yellow Jackets here with 80 000 to 100 000. They kill the strongest hives first. Using a little more aggressive bees helps. Other than that good points
@td4190
@td4190 2 жыл бұрын
I get into my hive at the house all the time. Usually once a week something two just for me
@rickwarner9142
@rickwarner9142 4 жыл бұрын
Agreed with almost all of the myths but number 10 not that they will recognize you but that they recognize you for about three or four days and able to remember you for days
@marcoantoniogranillochapa
@marcoantoniogranillochapa 4 жыл бұрын
Helpful info. Nice shirt. Missing cowboy hat. Best regards from cowboy country.
@larrytornetta9764
@larrytornetta9764 4 жыл бұрын
If you do it right you don’t need a suit, veil or even a shirt. I check bees in just shorts. It depends on what you’re doing in the hive and what the bees are doing. Also if it’s warm enough for the bees to take syrup, feed them until you put the honey supers on. They will be feeding at night and building the colony so when you put the honey supers on they are at maximum population.
@stephenmurphy8538
@stephenmurphy8538 4 жыл бұрын
Good job thank for the good advice
@tormodgustavsen9249
@tormodgustavsen9249 3 жыл бұрын
Very helpful. Thank you!
@donbearden1953
@donbearden1953 4 жыл бұрын
Kamon, some of the blind hobbiest aren’t as blind as you might think because they watch every video that Fredrick Dunn, Ian Steppler, Jeff Horchoff, Randy McCaffrey and the famous Kamon Reynolds from Tennessee’s Bees post on KZbin! RTR!
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
It is more a warning than a rule of thumb. You could easily make the argument that KZbinrs can be the blind leading the blind. Thanks for the kind words though Don. Football season is too far away :(
@FloryJohann
@FloryJohann 4 жыл бұрын
What I seen many times here on KZbin is that youtubers repeat what other youtubers said in their in their videos without checking the facts and spreading lies and fictions. That is why I limit my youtube videos to Kamon, Ian and maybe 1 or 2 more folks. Kamon is on my #1 list.
@mckeeshoneybees8351
@mckeeshoneybees8351 4 жыл бұрын
Hi kamon, I posted this question on another video but do you know if there’s a difference in oa 99.6% or oa 99.8%. I was told to make sure to use the 99.8 but it’s harder to find in bulk than the 99.6.
@alvinjoseph8724
@alvinjoseph8724 2 жыл бұрын
Great to hear this
@edcoffin3514
@edcoffin3514 4 жыл бұрын
Anyone who thinks queen excludes reduces the amount of honey bee's produce has never seen Ian Steppler, aka- Canadian Beekeeper video's 😎😎😎
@gileshoney5796
@gileshoney5796 4 жыл бұрын
True story. I switched to single brood management using a queen excluder after watching a bunch of Ian's videos, and couldn't be happier.
@oneshoo
@oneshoo 4 жыл бұрын
Giles Honey Steppler collects over 300 thousand lbs of honey most years and uses excluders exclusively. I’m only beekeeping for 20 minutes and I read and watch this myth a lot ??? 🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️
@gileshoney5796
@gileshoney5796 4 жыл бұрын
@@oneshoo I switched to single brood box management (like Ian Steppler) so I have to use queen excluders. I find absolutely no issues with using them.
@oneshoo
@oneshoo 4 жыл бұрын
Giles Honey Yes I’ve seen a lot of single management style brood boxes all over KZbin and everyone seems to love them? I am going into my second year with two hives here in NJ and I’m just not experienced enough to try out the single box style? I went double brood box and did not use excluders. I was able to harvest 50lbs of honey for my own use and leave about 60 lbs of honey for the bees in each hive. Local Beeks said that amount was sufficient enough to get them through winter in my area? So far so good as both hives seem to be doing well. The majority of Beeks in my area do not use excluders? Have you ever heard of putting 2 or 3 frames of capped honey in the middle of a honey super right on top of the brood box. The Beeks here say that if the Queen gets up into the super, she will not lay because of the capped honey in the middle of the super???
@gileshoney5796
@gileshoney5796 4 жыл бұрын
@@oneshoo I have heart stores about queens not laying above the honey line, but I don't find that to be true. This is my first year using sing brood boxes. I have to admit that you do have to change your management style over that of using double brood boxes, especially in the spring due to the increased chance of swarms. That being said, I found the honey season to be better than when I used doubles as the bees put the honey above the excluder in order to make more room for brood (at least that was my experience). Last year I pulled about 200 pounds of honey from 4 hives (all first-year hives). I then worked hard at getting the weight of the hives up to over 90 pounds before winter. I also added a 1-inch shim, put down a newspaper and added dry sugar. As of a few days ago, they were all doing really good. Feel free to follow me on my channel if you want to see how things go through the winter and into my second year using single brood boxes.
@randallcarter-carterhillho2277
@randallcarter-carterhillho2277 4 жыл бұрын
Great information!!
@kevinwright8823
@kevinwright8823 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Kamon! As always, good information. I'm waiting on the tshirts!! LOL
@chuckdiesle
@chuckdiesle 3 жыл бұрын
Just picked up a couple swarms from cedar shrubs!!
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 3 жыл бұрын
Saw a hive in a hollow cedar tree yesterday! We left them as they seemed fine in there and I didn't feel like chainsawing into a hive!
@judykeller599
@judykeller599 Күн бұрын
I have all my hives facing every direction you can think of except North I don't like to face any of my house North because of our North wind here that we have in East Texas it gets mighty cold sometimes now that's just my what I like to do
@downunderfulla6001
@downunderfulla6001 4 жыл бұрын
🍻🍻
@lenoretalon9958
@lenoretalon9958 4 жыл бұрын
😂 #5. That’s definitely a wives tale. Mine are major moochers lmao! I put my hive front towards the east. Why- I just do. No reason.
@natserog
@natserog 4 жыл бұрын
love this video!! great info!!
@trishapellis
@trishapellis 3 жыл бұрын
Vino Farm used to have all his beehives faced south, and last winter all of them died except one - the one hive out of the whole bee yard that was facing north. As there was trouble with robbing etc by the end of last year, he figured that problem might have been facilitated/ exacerbated by it being very easy for all the bees to find the entrances to all the hives because they were all on the same side, so he now has all of them facing different directions. He lives in a cold area (Michigan I think it is).
@gulliver1416
@gulliver1416 2 жыл бұрын
I believe Vino Farm is in MA where I live for I watched one of his videos and I was surprised to find out that he lives in the same state. I wanted to visit his farm.
@getgadfly
@getgadfly 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for clearing those things up Kamon! Nice shirt! At least it isn't an Alabama shirt😆
@carlapearson3793
@carlapearson3793 4 жыл бұрын
I thought FOR SURE you would include the myth of "You can't reuse old comb" ... and we all know who generates this myth ;) We all love watching your videos here at Starlight Bees (cheap, shameless plug).
@gulliver1416
@gulliver1416 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Kamon for this informative video. I'm relieved to hear that one can open the hive in the winter to feed. I was under the impression that you shouldn't open the hive in the winter because the bees will die. I lost a hive over the winter because of starvation. I had a wireless thermometer in it and in Jan the temp went to 28 degrees so I knew the hive died. I looked in it during a thaw and noted that the bees went through all of their food stores. Any chance that you could do a video on 'Queen Bee Myths' ? It's Nov here in the Northeast, very warm fall and when I checked my single brood box colony I saw a large queen cell being built. I thought that bees don't make queen cells in the fall esp when there is a current queen running around the colony.
@braegarden6478
@braegarden6478 4 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video mate!!!!
@bodacious2276
@bodacious2276 4 жыл бұрын
Lets all take a moment be thankful that bees don't know when to stop.
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Yes!
@researcherAmateur
@researcherAmateur 4 жыл бұрын
Lets not doo fannyhonny nither
@bodacious2276
@bodacious2276 4 жыл бұрын
@@tractionownersclub4827 I fixed it. lol
@jerrymosley4362
@jerrymosley4362 3 жыл бұрын
Hey just wanted to say thanks for the awesome videos. I worked bees several years ago before the mite attack.loved working the bees then but after the mites I got out of it because I really didn’t know what needed to be done, then I got back into it in 2016 but bought nukes from a commercial bee keeper that moved the bees from Florida to Indiana and they just sucked. I think they were his old stock and just dumped them on a few of us ignorant bee keepers just because.I didn’t get into the Queen rearing was always scared of that for some reason. Anyway after watching your videos I’m making several boxes, hive traps and ordered a bunch of Queen rearing supplies and books, also trying to watch all of your videos! Keep them coming so much great info. Just a little word to some of these people that seem to find something wrong with how you work your bees! There are several ways to work bees just because a person does it differently than you or how you were taught does not make it wrong. And so far Kamon seems to be rocking it!
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words Jerry!
@trichard5106
@trichard5106 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks !!
@georgesmith4509
@georgesmith4509 3 жыл бұрын
I forgot to mention( facing all your hives the same direction myth) In Australia migratory beekeepers hives are quite often loaded 4 to a pallet (ease of unloading) entrances in opposite directions
@danielw3369
@danielw3369 4 жыл бұрын
Great informations.
@KevinSmith-dx6xq
@KevinSmith-dx6xq 4 жыл бұрын
When you were talking about wax moths you said a possibility was too little bee space somewhere like between the inner cover and the frames. How would I recognize that there was too little bee space? It's my first year and I'm lucky I got both of my hives into winter with the mistakes I've made.
@buttsbeesllc4063
@buttsbeesllc4063 4 жыл бұрын
Figure the size of a pencil, if a bee can't patrol it the moth or beetle has a spot to hide.
@dennisanthony8335
@dennisanthony8335 4 жыл бұрын
Hey Kamon, great vid. I have seeley’s book and found it very informative
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Yes it a great read especially for us Bee Nerds!
@jejewa2763
@jejewa2763 4 жыл бұрын
Two questions: 1...does the Queen bee lay eggs during winter and compared to summer, what is the difference in quantity? 2... Can we use plastic made hives with plastic combs fully made?🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝
@gileshoney5796
@gileshoney5796 4 жыл бұрын
yes, queens generally lay eggs during winter, just on a MUCH smaller scale as the warmer months. I am in central Maine, and if I were to go through my frames I would find a small amount of brood. keep in mind that the brood needs to be kept warm, so your hives need to be at a point where the bees can regulate that temperature. That is part of the reason why I chose to switch to a single brood box management style.
@royschrader8003
@royschrader8003 4 жыл бұрын
Mr. K just opened his hives showing his queen laying in the winter months. Weather looks good in the next few days I'm check mine then.
@td4190
@td4190 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah that cedar tree one's definitely BS. I have a hive that seems to love to just pull out of the hive almost completely and hang out in a cedar tree and then they come back at night
@td4190
@td4190 2 жыл бұрын
I've watched them do it a few times in the same year they always come back but they like to hang out in that cedar tree
@waynewatson-cedarbranchhiv8491
@waynewatson-cedarbranchhiv8491 4 жыл бұрын
Great info, myth 7 hits me, 😆 i caught 10 of my 12 swarms i caught last yr in cedar trees, they love em, heck i even cut cedar trees and tie to fences where arent any close , works better than swarm traps! 😀 , after all my honey buisness aint called "cedar Branch hives" for nothing ! All your myths are for sure nothing but MYTHS !!!
@REVHARDD
@REVHARDD 4 жыл бұрын
Myth 2, it shortens worker bees life. It wore down their wings and/or body. Richard noel did an explanation on that I think, leaving entrance ontop should help with that I guess. Myth 6, just a higher chances of killing queens/bees when in them often. My neighbour always kills queens 🤷‍♂️ our bees africanized, so idk.. Myth7, all my boxes are cedar boxes, covers, Bottomboards, frames everything. No deaths because of that 🤣
@allglad
@allglad 4 жыл бұрын
#1 myth the bee war/crisis. ...except that I don't have bee hives where I currently live..that is a crisis..till Aprilish.
@natserog
@natserog 4 жыл бұрын
Alpha Bees Rule!!
@FloryJohann
@FloryJohann 4 жыл бұрын
I have a picture of me at the outside and inside of the hive, so the bees do not forget who the boss is.
@MrBigjoecincy
@MrBigjoecincy 4 жыл бұрын
I always say. Other people's advice is where your research should start
@jimmyjapa6368
@jimmyjapa6368 4 жыл бұрын
NICE,,,,,,,, GOOD WORK KID,,,,,,
@MegaDavyk
@MegaDavyk 4 жыл бұрын
Myth number 10 "Bees recognise their Beekeeper". I know there is no logic to it but something is going on there. I consider my Bees to be very gentle but I have had people come to my bee yard and get stung just for being there before we did anything and it never occurred to me that I would get stung and of course I did not. Update:- I did some research and came up with a possible solution Morphic resonance and morphogenetic fields, the case can be made that the hive mind or consciousness recognises you even thought most if not all of the bees have never seen you. When you think about it, we remember what happened to us years ago even though every cell in our body and brain has been replaced multiple times, the Neurons that recorded the event are long gone but we still remember.
@washfamapiary659
@washfamapiary659 3 жыл бұрын
What is your suggestion when creating an upper entrance during a flow so the girls don't have to travel the entire hive? Do you just drill a small hole in the front of the box of the honey super near the top of it? If so, about what size? Thanks!!
@daisyshoney6021
@daisyshoney6021 4 жыл бұрын
Kamon, I had mixed results with Queen Excluders. Last year my home yard with 70 plus hives, I used 15 Queen Excluder. All had upper entrances. The honey supers were getting high, some were five honey super high. Getting too high to work, time to steal the honey. I was shocked. Three hives had double Queens, one on either side of the excluder. The honey supers had three to four frames of brood all running up the middle. Boy, I had lots of bees. Note: I had a marked queen in a nuc that I thought died. I think I found her in one of the honey supers. LOL One more thing I saw. One of my hives looked like it was having a drone mating area in front of the hive, like a mini swarm. After ten minutes the bee mostly went back by the upper entrance. I check the hive the next day. The honey supers above the excluder were loaded with drones. I removed the excluder. For me, if I use excluders, I will think twice about upper entrances
@mikeries8549
@mikeries8549 4 жыл бұрын
The upper entrance is good and bad. You saw why it's bad. I guess I'd try screening off the upper with 1/8" mesh. Managed one hive for someone else that was low on my priorities because I had to climb a ladder to get to it. That one did the same thing yours did. Double queen. One above and one below the excluder. Pita.
@JohnVK5JAK
@JohnVK5JAK 4 жыл бұрын
As usual, an informative video. BUT what I really want to know is, what's in the tank behind you??????
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
That Tank houses a Green Anole. He is quite, small, and can camouflage himself
@JohnVK5JAK
@JohnVK5JAK 4 жыл бұрын
@@kamonreynolds Thanx Muchly. Down here in South Australia we wouldn't see any of those outside of a zoo exhibit. Lots of deadly reptile type thing down here though.
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 4 жыл бұрын
Yessir that is what I understand you all got the Lions share of crazy critters!
@HR-mp9ct
@HR-mp9ct 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah about cedar, I had a cedar stump that I cut as a coffee table wild honey bees decided to move into the stump of cedar, my point bees do not care
@brucesbees
@brucesbees 3 жыл бұрын
What do you think about feeding pollen sub via open feeding during dearth?
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Bruce! I think that if the bees will take it give it to them. During the summer dearths. I don't feed it all winter. Once we have natural pollen in early Feb we leave it out to fill up gaps. still testing things out though!
@brucesbees
@brucesbees 3 жыл бұрын
@@kamonreynolds yeah me too. I think I will always be testing🙂
@markridgemr
@markridgemr Жыл бұрын
Myth # 11: The bees need 3 deep brood chambers, especially in the north, to thrive.
@brettjones7873
@brettjones7873 Жыл бұрын
How do you feel on hives getting first morning sunlight? I am going to test a few colonies in wooded areas. I have heard numerous times it’s crucial to keep bees in early morning sun for honey production.
@kamonreynolds
@kamonreynolds Жыл бұрын
It does get them out a little earlier so it probably effects it to a degree but I am sure they can still make honey
@mrsweettater
@mrsweettater 4 жыл бұрын
I will vouch for myth #3! I live in Iowa and we get some nasty winters, but I don't wrap my hives or worry about breaking the seal. In fact, I put a 3/8" shim under the back side of the lid to create an upper opening which helps ventilate the hive too. I place hay, straw or fodder bales on the three sides of my hives to block the wind and put crystal sugar on the inner cover in case they need it. The sugar draws moisture out and the shim creates good ventilation. I think moisture kills bees more than cold temps, if they have food. This is all my humble opinion, but I rarely lose a hive over the winter.
@kevimc
@kevimc 4 жыл бұрын
what, these are my girls of course they know me, I talk with them, my phermones are in the colony, come on
@buttsbeesllc4063
@buttsbeesllc4063 4 жыл бұрын
Your bees do know you and your face!
@blueeyedbeekeepers8709
@blueeyedbeekeepers8709 4 жыл бұрын
We at Mighty MO Apirary will donate a full cedar hive setup to you Mr. Reynolds if you'll do videos to show how a cedar hive does to help show that it works. Please feel free to contact us on Facebook or call Jake Knight or I (Austin Robertson).
@matthewshaw3470
@matthewshaw3470 4 жыл бұрын
Cedar wood makes the best hives you don’t have to paint them like the cheap pine ones
@FloryJohann
@FloryJohann 4 жыл бұрын
Another myth is. The bees think that it is a bear. How many bees actual have been seeing a bear?
@leonunlimited7552
@leonunlimited7552 2 жыл бұрын
My hives are cedar LOL!!
@pcelarskisokak
@pcelarskisokak 3 жыл бұрын
There is another current myth that stands in the way of successful beekeeping: there is always someone or something else to blame for the loss or weak bee communities, never a beekeeper.
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